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Cat Scratch Disease

Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1971
SUMMARY Cat scratch disease is a self-limiting, infectious disease of man characterized by regional lymphadenopathy following the scratch or bite of a cat. The disease is widespread and affects thousands of people annually. The risk is greatest for children and veterinarians. The etiologic agent, presumably a virus, is unknown.
R A, Griesemer, L G, Wolfe
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Cat Scratch Disease [PDF]

open access: possible, 2015
Cat scratch disease (CSD), an infectious zoonosis, is caused by Bartonella and a cat scratch or bite. Though its clinical manifestations are variable, it has common manifestations of local skin lesions and enlarged lymph nodes. It is a self-limited disease, with a natural disease course ranging from several weeks to several months. During recent years,
Xinhua Zhang, Qi Zhang, Hongjun Li
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Cat-Scratch Disease

Pediatrics In Review, 2006
1. Robin English, MD* 1. *Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, La After completing this article, readers should be able to: 1. Describe the etiology and epidemiology of cat-scratch disease. 2. Recognize the clinical presentation of cat-scratch disease in immunocompetent
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Cat scratch disease

Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 1985
Cat scratch disease is an infection that is characterized by an indolent, occasionally suppurative regional lymphadenitis frequently occurring following a scratch or close contact with a cat. The cutaneous lesion resulting at the site of inoculation may look like an insect bite.
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Cat-scratch disease

Revue Scientifique et Technique de l'OIE, 2000
Cat-scratch disease (CSD) was first described by Debré in 1950, yet the causative bacterial agent of CSD remained obscure until 1992, when Bartonella (formerly Rochalimaea) henselae was implicated in CSD by serological and microbiologic studies. Bartonella henselae had initially been linked to bacillary angiomatosis (BA), a vascular proliferative ...
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Cat-Scratch Disease with Encephalopathy

Clinical Pediatrics, 1980
A case of encephalopathy complicating cat-scratch disease has been de scribed. Neurologic signs manifested by convulsions and stupor appeared ten days after epitrochlear lymphadenopathy. The clinical course gradually improved over the next few days and recovery was complete. The spinal fluid was normal. The skin test with CSD antigen was positive.
William E. Bell, Philip Miller
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CAT SCRATCH DISEASE

Pediatrics, 1958
SINCE the first report by Debré in 1950 of a syndrome of regional lymphadenopathy after a cat scratch, a number of publications reporting several hundred cases have firmly established cat scratch disease as a clinical entity. The role of the cat in the natural history of the disease is not clearly understood, but the available evidence suggests the ...
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CAT-SCRATCH DISEASE

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1970
To the Editor .—May I express my delight with the little special article (Amer J Dis Child119:200-203, 1970) by Dr. H. A. Carithers on the history of cat scratch fever. May I add a bit of amplification upon Dr. Foshay's role. Because of his enormous experience with tularemia, he was frequently asked to see patients with unexplained lymphadenopathy ...
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Cat-scratch disease

Ophthalmology, 1999
Cat-scratch disease is a self-limited systemic illness caused by a gram-negative bacillus, Bartonella henselae. Neuroretinitis is the most typical ocular manifestation of cat-scratch disease, but an array of other ocular changes may occur including Parinaud’s oculoglandular syndrome, retinitis, chorioretinitis, and vascular changes.
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Cat Scratch Disease

Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America, 1982
William M. Heroman, William S. McCurley
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